San Francisco is a great city—and it’s not like there aren't enough great things to do here on the weekends—but sometimes you just need to escape for a bit. Luckily, this lovely city is surrounded by spectacular scenery, beautiful beaches and small towns perfect for day trips. From wine-tasting in the Santa Cruz mountains to vintage-hunting in Sebastopol, you’re sure to find a short trip worth taking on this list.

RECOMMENDED: Get some fresh air while staying in the city one one of the best hikes in San Francisco.

Tiburon and Angel Island

40 mins by car; 20 mins by ferry

In Tiburon you'll get that small-town vacation vibe less than an hour from the city—and with fewer tourists than in Sausalito. Rent a bike from Demo Sport and either do a segment of the Paradise Drive Loop (download a map from marinbike.org) or let serendipity take you past numerous pretty houses with impressive bay views. Hop on to the Angel Island-Tiburon Ferry and visit the museum at the Angel Island Immigration Station, which documents the experiences of the many immigrants who crossed the Pacific Ocean and reached Angel Island as their first stop. Look out for poetry scrawled on the walls when the station was used as a detention center. For lunch, we recommend a picnic at one of the many picnic areas scattered around the island. When you head back to Tiburon, make a stop at Luna Blu, a waterfront Italian restaurant that serves English afternoon tea. Indulge in scones with Devonshire clotted cream and mixed berry jam, together with traditional English cucumber sandwiches. Before you head home, take a leisurely stroll through Shoreline Park for spectacular views in the evening light of San Francisco across the bay.

Photograph: Courtesy Thomas Fogarty Winery

Skyline Boulevard, Woodside

1 hr by car

Escape into the cool blue mountains via Skyline Boulevard in Woodside, which offers nature trails, speactacular ocean and valley views and wine-tasting without the traffic. When you reach town, you'll see a wooden cabin in a clearing at the intersection. This is Alice’s Restaurant, the place to stop if you like to have your burgers and BBQ paired with the rumble of Harleys. Popular with bikers and cyclists plying the mountain roads, Alice’s offers breakfast until 2pm, Texas-style BBQ (brisket and pulled pork smoked in-house) and cheesy (both literally and figuratively) motorbike-themed burgers. This is still the Bay Area, though, so the burgers are made with hormone- and antibiotic-free beef patties, and there’s gluten-free beer on the menu. After lunch, continue southeast on Skyline. Ten minutes away is Thomas Fogarty Winery—it’s a short drive, so don’t miss the few unmarked vista points along the way, where you can catch panoramic views of the ocean across rolling hills. In the winery's tasting room, try a flight of five signature wines or buy a bottle, borrow some glasses and sit out in the romantic wooden gazebo. For a different kind of unwinding, visit the Jikoji Zen Center. Founded by Kobun Chino Otogawa, Steve Jobs’ mentor, the center welcomes visitors to meditate in its zendos or wander its tranquil grounds. From the front gate, it’s a winding dirt track down to the main building, so make sure your suspension’s in place. Ring the ageing bronze bell at the entrance to let them know it’s your first time.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Ray Bouknight

Pescadero

1 hr by car

Pescadero boasts stunning bluffs and sandy beaches next to a small country town with a laid-back main street. Start your day by exploring the Pescadero Marsh Natural Preserve, a 243 acre wetland habitat popular with hikers and bird-watchers. For a short, relaxed stroll, take the Butano Trail up to a picturesque iron bridge over the creek. Or, for a longer hike up to a pretty eucalyptus grove, take the Sequoia Audubon Trail past coastal scrub and Great Blue Heron nesting sites. After your workout, head to Arcangeli Grocery in Norm’s Market, where you can get made-to-order grilled sandwiches from the deli in the back. For dessert, amble down the street to the James Beard-anointed America’s Classic Duarte’s Tavern for a slice of their olallieberry pie. Afterward, head to Downtown Local for a cup of Sightglass coffee and browse their eclectic vintage collection, including two café racer motorbikes (look out for the 1949 Nimbus in the window). End your day at Pescadero State Beach: Park at the northernmost parking lot if you want long sandy beaches, or at the southernmost lot if you’d like to clamber over rocky outcrops, inspect tide pools and watch the surf from the top of a sandstone bluff. As sunset approaches, join the locals in camping chairs and blankets on the sand. Or if you’re in the mood for a little pampering, head up the coast to Navio at the Ritz-Carlton, score yourself a window table and watch the sun set beyond the ocean over a glass of pinot noir.

Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Markus Spiering

Stinson Beach and Bolinas

1 hr by car

For friendly, laidback beach vibes, venture north to Stinson Beach and Bolinas. These two points that practically bookend Bolinas Bay boast rugged coastline, white sandy stretches for miles (three at least) and water-based activities. Newbie surfers can book lessons at the 2 Mile Surf Shop, while keen swimmers should look out for Bass Lake, a freshwater lake that's situated a short drive up Mesa Road, plus a near-three-mile hike (trust us, it's worth it). Reenergize with some fresh seafood and a salad – especially the strawberry, mango and spinach number – at Sand Dollar Restaurant, or pop into the hillside Coast Cafe for a chunky sandwich at lunch or something more substantial from their dinner menu. And if you're planning to stay for a swift one before driving back, try out Smiley’s Schooner Saloon, which is popular with the locals and offers games and live music with your drink.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/

Sebastopol

1 hr 10 mins by car

To dive right into Sebastopol's uncontrived vibe, drop in at Aubergine Vintage Emporium, a hangar-like space where you might pick up anything from a broken-in aviator jacket to a Soviet Army-issued canvas belt. Hidden behind the clothing racks are a cavernous live music venue and a bar with an open patio. If you’re of a spiritual rather than spirits bent, wander up to Many Rivers Books & Tea, a cozy bookshop stacked high with spiritual guidance tomes and figurines. In the tea shop at the back, pick up a bag of Monk’s Blend, a smooth malty mix of assam, darjeeling, keemun and nilgiri. For a light lunch, head to The Barlow, a cluster of restored warehouses once home to an apple processing plant. Sit out on the patio at Woodfour Brewing Company and try one of their Belgian farmhouse-style sours, mashed and boiled in the copper-plated tanks right behind the bar. Snack on cheeses from Petaluma, bratwurst, or Miyagi oysters. Across the street, browse Scandinavian-inspired ceramics at the Passdoor. A small detour to nearby Guerneville would be worth your while, if only to check out Guerneville Bank Club, a historic bank building now housing an ice cream parlor and a corner store specializing in handmade crafts. Grab a cone of Bulleit Bourbon with chocolate-covered pretzels if it’s available. Take in the Russian River Historical Society’s exhibit at the back of the building, cataloguing Guerneville’s early days as a logging town. For dinner, make your way back to Sebastopol and to Peter Lowell’s for a farm-to-table menu of seasonal, rustic Italian fare. Wrap up your night with a digestif at the Hopmonk Tavern, a vast space with a red banquette bar, concert venue and a Tuscan-inspired garden strung with lights.

Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Don DeBold

Los Gatos

1 hr 10 mins by car

With its affluent tone and charming yet eclectic main street, Los Gatos on the weekend sees well-heeled locals having relaxed brunches or shopping at their local Apple Store, all at the foot of the Santa Cruz Mountains. If Michelin-starred Manresa feels excessive for the day, drop in at Manresa Bread instead and take home a loaf of their signature sourdough levain. For lunch or an early dinner, stop in at Oak & Rye, a popular bistro with a wood-fired oven and a rye- and bourbon-laced cocktail list (best with the bistro's pretzel bread, made from 2-year yeast grown in-house). Pull in to the Powell Sweet Shoppe for some old-school candy store nostalgia. Their selection is vast, with beer-flavored jelly beans, bacon candy stripes, an ice cream counter and a cotton candy machine. Thre's even a screen in back showing Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in front of a row of old movie theater seats. Bay Area history buffs shouldn’t miss a trip to Quicksilver Country nearby: Mercury was being mined in New Almaden before the Gold Rush, and the New Almaden mines were the most valuable in the state, attracting Cornish, Chinese and Mexican settlers. The New Almaden Mining Museum is housed in the Casa Grande, built in 1854 as the official residence of mining supervisors. If you’re feeling energetic, hike up to English Camp in the County Park next door for an aerial view of the remaining mine buildings.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Brent De Vries

Point Reyes

1 hr 30 mins by car

With an enormous 71,000 acres of nature preserve on the Pacific Coast, Point Reyes offers a windswept, dramatic backdrop for elephant seals, an 145-year-old lighthouse and old growth Douglas-fir forests. Start your trip at the Bear Valley Visitor Center to orient yourself and pick up trail maps. Make your way to Chimney Rock, where a five minute walk from the parking lot takes you to a cliff's-edge vantage point. Watch a colony of Northern elephant seals on the sandy beaches below, or if you're visiting between January and April, catch the Pacific gray whale migration between Baja California and feeding grounds in Alaska. Take a ranger-led tour to watch Tule elk during rut season (July to september) or visit the Point Reyes Lighthouse to learn about its 6,000-pound Fresnel lens, constructed in France in 1867. If you want a dip in the water, Heart’s Desire Beach in neighboring Tomales Bay has shallower and warmer waters than the open ocean. Food options abound in nearby Point Reyes Station, a small rustic town at the mouth of the bay. Cowgirl Creamery churns out its award-winning artisanal cheeses on site—in a restored hay barn—and the Cowgirl Cantina has creamy tomato soups, cheddar toasties and the classic organic ham and Mount Tam sandwich. Point Reyes Books deserves a look-in while you’re here. This winsome little independent bookstore has respectable collections on wildlife and the environment, and routinely hosts events involving the local artists’ community. A worthwhile place to browse away an afternoon among pine bookshelves under a vintage chandelier.

Photograph: Courtesy Gilroy Welcome Center

Gilroy

1 hr 30 mins by car

Forget the frenzied outlet shopping malls that are always plonked near industrial parks and parking garages. Gilroy offers outlet bargains and more in quaint surrounds. It's also famed for its farmstands and markets, where you can pick up all manner of fresh fruit, vegetables, flowers, juices and preserves – not to mention the infamous Gilroy garlic. Pop over to Garlic World on Monterey Road to immerse yourselves in all things vampire-repelling. There you'll find everything from seasonings to dips to garlic-flavoured almonds. And if you happen to be in Gilroy over the last weekend of July, you can catch the Garlic Festival – three days' worth of chef demonstrations, garlic-infused edibles (even ice cream), music and craft shows. After all that garlic action, you might want to air out before heading home. The rambling woodland of Henry Coe State Park is a good place to do this; with 250 miles of land, it's the largest state park in California.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Thomas Hawk

Santa Cruz

1 hr 30 mins by car

Beyond the surf and boardwalk amusement park rides that Santa Cruz is famed for are mountain ranges, treetop walks, butterflies and indie bands. The adventurous should beeline for Mount Hermon, where you'll find all sorts of activities. Try your hand at everything from an ecology tour in the trees to a two-hour zipline, railroad riding and Bigfoot hunting. Those who prefer to remain on terra firma, and are visiting during the colder months, should try and catch the impressive butterflies residing in the eucalyptus trees at Monarch Grove, in Natural Bridges State Beach. Music lovers will be satisfied with a night at Moe's Alley, where they regularly host local and international bands. Foodies and craft beer aficionados can treat themselves to a slap-up meal and drink at Cremer House, the restaurant in the nineteenth-century Grand Central Hotel. The menu has upscale pub food (think reuben pastrami, yam chips, or tuna melt with aged cheddar on griddled challah), and there are 25 craft beers on tap.

Photograph: Courtesy the city of Carmel-by-the-Sea

Carmel

2 hrs by car

Carmel’s Ocean Avenue and its environs are a great place to feel the European village vibe the town is famous for. A worthwhile stop is the elegant Harrison Memorial Library, which occupies a building designed by Bernard Maybeck (École des Beaux-Arts alumnus and architect of San Francisco’s Palace of Fine Arts). The reading room captures the charm of the quintessential small town library, with heavy tables flanked by tall windows. Outside, the flagstone courtyard is a pleasant place to sit back and people-watch. For a cultural stop, and to sample art that has roots in Carmel, visit the Weston Gallery. In addition to a vintage photography collection (including prints by Carmel’s own Edward Weston and Ansel Adams), the gallery halso as regular exhibitions of contemporary work. When hunger strikes, drop into Casanova, a charming French restaurant with a trellised outdoor patio. The eponymous Ocean Avenue leads directly to the ocean, and Carmel Beach is a lovely spot to kick back with locals on the fine white sand. Dog walkers and couples stop by in the afternoon to enjoy the view from the sheltered cove. History buffs will appreciate a trip to Carmel Mission, the second mission founded in Alta California. On the grounds is a shrine to Junípero Serra, a member of the Portolà expedition which brought the first European settlers to the Bay Area.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Kai Schreiber

Gold Country

2 hrs 30 mins by car

The Gold Rush pretty much jolted San Francisco (along with the rest of California) onto the world map, so a list of day trips would be incomplete without a visit to Gold Country. Much of it is further away than you’d want to travel in a day, but for a quick escape into the past, head to Columbia. This historic town set in the Sierra Nevada foothills features shops and restaurants preserved to evoke the 1850s Gold Rush-era. Walk into Parrott’s Blacksmith Shop and get yourself a memento forged in their coal oven. For lunch, hit up Columbia Kate’s Teahouse. Sit in a tiny red 1880s-style barn and enjoy rustic fare like chicken pot pie made from scratch or spinach and ricotta quiche. For a taste of old-style candy-making, visit Nelson’s Columbia Candy Kitchen, which still cooks candy in copper kettles and cools it on 100-year-old marble-topped tables. On the way back home, stop at Parrotts Ferry Bridge, which offers dramatic views over New Melones Lake and the adjoining hills. Imagine that you can still see the ferries that once plied the lake, carrying passengers between mining towns during the Gold Rush.

Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Ray Bouknight

Point Lobos

2 hrs 30 mins by car

With miles of hiking trails across cliffs, coves and forests; plus a rich marine habitat of giant kelp forests with sea lions darting through them, Point Lobos offers a great day out for photographers, hikers and scuba divers. Park by Cannery Point and start at the Whaler’s Cabin, a museum on the site of a former whaling station displaying personal effects and diaries belonging to the Chinese, Portuguese and Japanese whalers who once lived here. You'll also see harpoons and learn the grisly process of harvesting blubber. Parts of humpback and gray whale skeletons lie somewhat gruesomely scattered outside. If you’re oceanically-inclined, the neighboring Whaler’s Cove is the place to scuba dive, kayak or do some stand-up paddle boarding. Otherwise, find your way to Sea Lion Cove, where California sea lions and their pups can be spotted during pupping season, packing the beach nose to tail. A walk along the Sea Lion Point Trail will show you some of the best views of the reserve, with its characteristic lashing waves and craggy outcrops. Stop at Piney Woods for a picnic lunch with a view. Before you head home, make your way to the famed tide pools on what is now called Weston Beach. Large sandstone slabs jut out of the ground, creating an awesome display of colors and patterns, all composed of sand that settled in underwater beds millions of years ago.

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Photograph: Courtesy Creative Commons/Flickr/Steve Dunleavy

Big Sur

2 hrs 40 mins by car

With winding mountainside roads, sweeping beaches and breathtaking sunsets, is it any wonder the Big Sur is the subject matter of so many songs? (Ahem, The Thrills and Buckethead, we're looking at you.) Ok, so it's pushing it on the day trip scale from San Fran, but if you head out at the crack of dawn, or thereabouts, the drive will be totally worth it. Plus, the high quality of relaxing and eating that can be done there is sure to send you back singing. Make your way in on Highway 1, lap up the crazy beautiful views, and beeline for the beach – Pfeiffer is the piece of shoreline where you can see the arched rock that forms a stunning light tunnel at sunrise/set. Then wander up to the vantage point at McWay Falls to admire the tropical island-like vibes, before swanning off for lunch. Sierra Mar, the restaurant at Post Ranch Inn offers a three-course prix fixe lunch with a view of the Pacific. Or stop in at Nepenthe amid the trees for 'The Famous Ambrosiaburger' – a ground steak sandwich, served on a French roll with Nepenthe's own ambrosia sauce. After that you'll likely want to relax a bit before the hefty drive back, so chill out at Ventana Inn, a wooden-lodge-style hotel that welcomes day guests at their spa. And if you don't want to chill out? The Henry Miller Memorial Library is a must-see and they even host a range of events, like Philip Glass’s Days and Nights Festival in late September.

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